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Homeschooling and College
While homeschool programs vary in approach, almost none attempt to incorporate or extend the type and level of
education available in traditional colleges. Though many state and even private colleges and universities educate
as poorly as public schools in general, there remain many outstanding ones.
Homeschooled students tend to excel, both in content and the eagerness and ability to learn. So, they will often
want to enter one of those excellent schools in their mid to late teens. But applying to college, difficult for
anyone, can be especially tough for those who acquired an education in a non-traditional setting.
The absence of state, or even licensed private school, transcripts is the first hurdle for most homeschooled
individuals. But that barrier has been overcome by thousands, perhaps millions, of homeschooled students.
Universities, even the most (and sometimes particularly the most) prestigious accept homeschooled students. Here,
too, such students frequently excel.
One common method for tackling 'the transcript problem' is to generate one as the child matures. Many homeschooled
programs are structured, making it easier to keep records and assign grades much as is done in public schools. Such
records are taken seriously by many colleges. It's best to start earlier than usual to explore which ones might be
targeted for admission.
Select a half-dozen possible colleges or universities and ask the admissions department officials what they look
for in terms of transcripts. More and more are becoming used to answering the question from parents of homeschooled
teens. Over 2 million kids per year are now homeschooled - many of them choose to go to a traditional four-year
college.
There are other forms, in some ways even more important, for admissions officials to judge fitness. Decisions for
admission, at least the 'first cut' of applications, are made based on standardized tests such as the SAT and the
ACT. Homeschooled students are free to take these like their public or private school peers. On average,
homeschooled students do much better on these tests, giving them a leg up for college admission.
After gathering these objective data, other criteria come into play. Many colleges have their own admissions tests.
Even apart from administered tests, college applications very often have a section requiring students to write some
sort of essay. Those sections provide students with an opportunity not only to express intelligent views of the
world, but to give admissions officers insight into individual tastes and ability.
Individual essays are often used to ferret out unusual personal interests, aptitude and other unique attributes
that make the applicant stand out. That's an area in which homeschoolers, with their non-traditional education, can
easily excel.
A mixture of Advanced Placement courses, many of which can be taken in an independent study mode not requiring
attendance in a traditional classroom, is also a good idea. Those help flesh out the 'transcript' provided to
admissions officers. Some of them can be taken as part of an accelerated learning program, in which the student
studies material in advance of the common age of his or her peers.
Those courses help show decision makers that the student is fully prepared. They can show that the child hasn't
spent the previous ten years just sniffing flowers and smearing paint on parchment, one common and generally
mistaken view of homeschooling. They can demonstrate the common fact that homeschooled students are typically more
than ready to tackle the demands of college.
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